Liberal Catholic Church

Origins of the Liberal Catholic Church

The Liberal Catholic Church combines two elements separated since the early centuries of the Christian era. One of these is Christian sacramentalism of which the Roman Catholic, Orthodox and Anglican Churches have long been the principal custodians. The second is the esoteric Wisdom Tradition, which we believe once formed a vital leavening component within Christianity. With the suppression of those Greek Fathers of the Church who interpreted Christianity in the light of their Platonic background, the orthodoxy of the Latin Fathers prevailed, and the very few who preserved the deeper doctrines had of necessity to remain silent.

The Liberal Catholic Church traces its origin to 1916 when James Wedgwood was consecrated a bishop in the English Branch of the Old Catholic Church of the Netherlands. Wedgwood was a prominent member of the Theosophical Society, as was his co-founder, Charles Leadbeater. Under their leadership the English Old Catholic Church became independent of the Dutch church of origin, and adopted its present name (1918). The Liberal Catholic Church soon developed its own distinctive liturgy, which owes much to Wedgwood’s gift for language, and its own distinctive teachings, deriving from the worldview shared by the founders and their colleagues.

A new view of the sacraments

The Liberal Catholic Church offers Catholic sacramentalism in its fullness with the added advantage that the writings of the founding bishops help us to understand the inward effects of the various services. Above all they point to the Holy Eucharist, or Mass, as being the focus of a prodigious outpouring of blessing, which is believed to irradiate the whole neighbourhood of the Church, as well as nourishing spiritually the participants.

Freedom to grow

The doctrines of the Liberal Catholic Church are offered, not imposed. Members interpret them how they will. Freedom of belief is held to be an indispensable pre-condition for personal growth and maturity. Most Liberal Catholics however, do accept the tenets of the Church’s doctrine, holding that we all live many times, growing in will, love and refinement as we encounter the outcomes of past actions, whether of this life, or earlier lives.

From its inception the Liberal Catholic Church has insisted on the right of its members to entire freedom of belief. This applies equally to interpretation of creeds, of scripture, and of church tradition. A required profession of belief, it is suggested, tends to produce suppressed disbelief or stifled uncertainty on questions of doctrine. Rather, belief should be allowed to arise from enquiry, study and intuition, for which the authority of another, whether person, creed or book is no substitute.

The great world religions

Liberal Catholics are encouraged to take a sympathetic interest in the other great world religions, and to see them as alternate pathways back to our source in God.

Services offered

Services are open to all who wish to attend. At the Holy Eucharist all present are invited to receive Communion. A warm welcome is extended to parents with children. Baptism and Confirmation are offered, along with explanations of their inner effects. Regular services of healing are directed towards the healing of the body through the harmonising of the psyche. Liberal Catholic priests are nearly all registered as marriage celebrants, and will re-marry divorced persons who approach marriage with respect.

Liberal Catholic Clergy

Liberal Catholic clergy are unpaid, earning a living in the usual way, and doing their work for the Church in their spare time. They qualify, for ordination through years of graduated service, and through a comprehensive course leading to a qualification in Religious Studies. The Liberal Catholic Church in Australia has two active bishops and a number of priests, most of whom are married.

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What data do you collect and what do you use it for?

St Michael and All Angels collects data from individuals to help us plan, organise and run the day-to-day operations of the group (e.g. co-ordinating rehearsals or collecting subscription payments) and to promote and market the group’s activities (e.g. marketing mailing lists and photography/video capture).

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The St Michael and All Angels data retention policy is to review all data held on individuals at least every two years and remove data where we no longer have a legitimate reason to keep it.

Where you have withdrawn your consent for us to use your data for a particular purpose (e.g. unsubscribed from a mailing list) we may retain some of your data for up to two years in order to preserve a record of your consent having been withdrawn.

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Under the European GDPR, you have the following rights over your data and its use:

The right to be informed about what data we are collecting on you and how we will use it

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Though unlikely to apply to the data we hold and process on you, you also have rights related to portability and automated decision making (including profiling)

All requests related to your rights should be made through our Contact page. We will respond within one month.

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If we make changes to our privacy statements or processes we will post the changes here. Where the changes are significant, we may also choose to email individuals affected with the new details. Where required by law, will we ask for your consent to continue processing your data after these changes are made.

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